Slab Square Taram 16 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Weekly' by Los Andes, 'Egyptian Slate' and 'Prelo Slab Pro' by Monotype, and 'Pepi/Rudi' and 'Tabac Slab' by Suitcase Type Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, sports branding, headlines, packaging, signage, sporty, confident, retro, loud, assertive, impact, headline, branding, athletics, visibility, blocky, chunky, bracketed, ink-trap feel, compact joins.
A heavy, right-leaning slab serif with broad proportions and sturdy, squared-off letterforms. Strokes are largely monolinear, with thick slab serifs and gently bracketed transitions that keep corners from feeling brittle. Counters are relatively open for the weight, while joins and apertures stay compact, producing a dense, punchy texture in text. The italic construction is clearly built rather than cursive, maintaining a strong, geometric spine and consistent slab terminals across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display sizes where its mass and slanted stance can do the work—headlines, posters, sports identities, and bold editorial callouts. It can also be effective on packaging and signage that needs immediate legibility and a strong voice. In longer passages it will read heavy and emphatic, working best as a short-text companion rather than a primary text face.
The overall tone is bold and energetic, with a classic athletic and poster-like presence. Its lean and thick slabs add urgency and momentum while still feeling grounded and mechanical rather than calligraphic. The result reads as confident and attention-seeking, with a slightly vintage, Americana-leaning flavor.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a sturdy slab-serif skeleton and a forward-leaning, energetic rhythm. It prioritizes bold presence and clear silhouettes over delicacy, aiming for strong branding and headline performance in environments where visibility and personality are key.
Spacing appears generous enough to keep the heavy shapes from clogging, but the texture remains intentionally dense and high-impact. Numerals follow the same robust, slabbed construction, matching the caps in weight and stance for consistent headline setting.